LCCC ENGLISH DAILY
NEWS BULLETIN
November 02/14
Bible Quotation For Today/Present Suffering
and Future Glory
Romans 08/18-30: "I consider that our present sufferings are not
worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. For the creation
waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed. For the
creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of
the one who subjected it, in hope that the creation itself will be liberated
from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children
of God. We know that the whole creation has been groaning as in the pains of
childbirth right up to the present time. Not only so, but we ourselves, who
have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our
adoption to sonship, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were
saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what they already
have? But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently. In
the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought
to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans.
And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit
intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God. And we know that
in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called
according to his purpose. For those God foreknew he also predestined to be
conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many
brothers and sisters. And those he predestined, he also called; those he
called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified."
Question: "What does the Bible say about ghosts/hauntings?"
GotQuestions.org/Answer: Is there such a thing as
ghosts? The answer to this question depends on what precisely is meant by the
term “ghosts.” If the term means “spirit beings,” the answer is a qualified
“yes.” If the term means “spirits of people who have died,” the answer is “no.”
The Bible makes it abundantly clear that there are spirit beings, both good and
evil. But the Bible negates the idea that the spirits of deceased human beings
can remain on earth and “haunt” the living.
Hebrews 9:27 declares, “Man is destined to die once, and after that to face
judgment.” That is what happens to a person’s soul-spirit after death—judgment.
The result of this judgment is heaven for the believer (2 Corinthians 5:6-8;
Philippians 1:23) and hell for the unbeliever (Matthew 25:46; Luke 16:22-24).
There is no in-between. There is no possibility of remaining on earth in spirit
form as a “ghost.” If there are such things as ghosts, according to the Bible,
they absolutely cannot be the disembodied spirits of deceased human beings.
The Bible teaches very clearly that there are indeed spirit beings who can
connect with and appear in our physical world. The Bible identifies these beings
as angels and demons. Angels are spirit beings who are faithful in serving God.
Angels are righteous, good, and holy. Demons are fallen angels, angels who
rebelled against God. Demons are evil, deceptive, and destructive. According to
2 Corinthians 11:14-15, demons masquerade as “angels of light” and as “servants
of righteousness.” Appearing as a “ghost” and impersonating a deceased human
being definitely seem to be within the power and abilities that demons possess.
The closest biblical example of a “haunting” is found in Mark 5:1-20. A legion
of demons possessed a man and used the man to haunt a graveyard. There were no
ghosts involved. It was a case of a normal person being controlled by demons to
terrorize the people of that area. Demons only seek to “kill, steal, and
destroy” (John 10:10). They will do anything within their power to deceive
people, to lead people away from God. This is very likely the explanation of
“ghostly” activity today. Whether it is called a ghost, a ghoul, or a
poltergeist, if there is genuine evil spiritual activity occurring, it is the
work of demons.
What about instances in which “ghosts” act in “positive” ways? What about
psychics who claim to summon the deceased and gain true and useful information
from them? Again, it is crucial to remember that the goal of demons is to
deceive. If the result is that people trust in a psychic instead of God, a demon
will be more than willing to reveal true information. Even good and true
information, if from a source with evil motives, can be used to mislead,
corrupt, and destroy.
Interest in the paranormal is becoming increasingly common. There are
individuals and businesses that claim to be “ghost-hunters,” who for a price
will rid your home of ghosts. Psychics, séances, tarot cards, and mediums are
increasingly considered normal. Human beings are innately aware of the spiritual
world. Sadly, instead of seeking the truth about the spirit world by communing
with God and studying His Word, many people allow themselves to be led astray by
the spirit world. The demons surely laugh at the spiritual mass-deception that
exists in the world today.
Recommended Resources: The Truth Behind Ghosts, Mediums, and Psychic Phenomena
by Ron Rhodes and Logos Bible Software.
Latest
analysis, editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 01-02/14
Persecution, torture, murder: Iran blasted on human
rights ahead of UN hearing/By Jonathan Wachtel/FoxNews/November 01/14
With support for Syrians, the Iranian project
fails/Abdulrahman al-Rashed /AAl Arabiya/November
01/14
IAEA: Iran stopped answering questions about nuclear arms
development/Ynetnews/November
01/14
In Syria, no good options for West/Ynetnews/November 01/14
A Century After 1914/By Paul Salem/Vice President
for Policy and Research/November 01/14
Pain lingers as violence fades in north Lebanon/Kareem
Shaheen/The Daily Star/November 01/14
Selective memory: Iran's role in the Marine barracks
bombing/Tony Badran/Lebanon Now/November 01/14
Behind the lines: The Jihadi connection between
Sinai, Gaza and Islamic State/By
JONATHAN SPYER/J.Post/November 01/14
Diplomacy: Back to square one on Jordanian-Israeli
relations/By YOSSI MELMAN/J.Post/November
01/14
Lebanese Related News
published on November 01-02/14
Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi blasts state inequality, denies dealing with
Islamist militants
Hezbollah Reportedly Under Severe Strain From Syrian
Civil War
Qatar mediator concludes 3-day talks with Arsal
jihadists
Army raids refugee sites in northeast Lebanon
Second suspect arrested in Islamic emirate scheme in
Lebanon
Lebanon:
Extension vote For Extending Paliament term secured, most Christians not on
board
Army defuses five bombs, seizes arms in Tripoli
Bassil makes historic visit to UNIFIL
Saudi ambassador hits back at Nasrallah comments
Rai condemns tripartite power-sharing idea
Authorities await news from hostage mediator
Pain lingers as violence fades in north
Sewing provides livelihood for refugees
March 14 forced to choose lesser evil: Harb
Lebanon bought Israeli-linked security system: MP
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
November 01-02/14
U.S. warns citizens in Mideast to remain vigilant
U.S. tightens screws on financial institutions
Kurdish Peshmerga forces enter Syria’s Kobani after
further air strikes
Kurds in mass Turkey rallies against ISIS
Rocket fired from Gaza hits southern Israel: army
Syria rebels deploy peacekeepers in Idlib
A confused strategy
Airstrikes hit Kobani, peshmerga prepare to enter
Peshmerga fighters enter Kobani for IS fight
Report: Kerry, Zarif to hold nuclear talks in
Kurds' battle for Kobani unites a divided people
Abbas urges Kerry to rein in Israel on Jerusalem
Kerry phones Netanyahu to apologize over 'chickenshit' slur
Second terror attack in as many weeks rattles northern Sinai
Saudi arrests woman activist for 'insulting Islam'
Yemen’s Houthis turn up the pressure on Hadi
Below Jihad Watch
Posts For 31.10.14
Hizballah jihadist arrested with
weapons and explosives right before launching attack on Israeli and Jewish
targets…in Peru
1,000 Muslims streaming into
Syria every month to join the Islamic State
Jordan bans Halloween after
Muslim Brotherhood condemns it as “homosexual and Satanic”
Boko Haram top dog says abducted
girls married off after conversion to Islam
Robert Spencer in FrontPage: UK:
Child Sex Exploitation Now the ‘Norm’
One in seven young “Britons” has
“warm feelings” for the Islamic State
Islamic State murders 228 of its
foes in two days
Spain’s security chief: Islamic
State wants to use Ebola as jihad weapon
New UK law would ban critics of
Sharia from broadcasting, protesting or even posting messages on Facebook
Islamic State: Children as young
as five trained to fight and kill, repeat calls for murder of Western “infidels”
Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi blasts state inequality, denies dealing with
Islamist militants
Nov. 01, 2014/The Daily Star
BEIRUT: Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi said Saturday that the state should be fair
in implementing the nationwide crackdown on illegal arms, saying the Lebanese
Army must raid Hezbollah locations in Beirut, hours after denying a report he
transferred money to Islamist militants.
“We all know that in [Beirut's] southern suburbs there are thousands of arms
caches and the Army should implement the security plan equally on all Lebanese
areas and citizens,” Rifi told reporters at the home of one of his bodyguards.
“Raids should not be exclusive to Bab al-Tabbaneh. We are aware of thousands of
arms caches in Jabal Mohsen as well. Why don't they launch raids as well?,” he
asked, referring to the Alawite-majority neighborhood whose residents have
repeatedly clashed with those of Bab al-Tabbaneh over the past three years.
He also said people who carry arms were not necessarily terrorists, defending
Tripoli against claims that the northern city was a bastion of Islamist
militants, especially after the Army engaged in deadly fighting with gunmen in
Bab al-Tabbaneh.
During the four-day clashes, which erupted last week, and in the aftermath of
the fighting, the Army launched raids in search of militant suspects, arresting
dozens of Lebanese and Syrians and seizing several arms caches in Bab al-Tabbaneh
and other northern areas.
"Tripoli supports moderation and the Army, and its residents do not need to be
given a test of patriotism. They are more patriotic than those who claim to be
patriots,” said Rifi, a staunch critic of Hezbollah and the Syrian regime.
Rifi, a former security chief, made the remarks at the house of Deeb al-Laheeb,
a member of his security detail, hours after the minister denied a report in a
local newspaper that he used Laheeb to transfer money to militants holding
Lebanese soldiers hostage in order to prevent the execution of one of the
captives.
“I read this morning what was said in one of the publishing tools of the Iranian
alliance and whatever is left of the Syrian regime,” Rifi said in a statement,
in reference to Al-Akhbar newspaper’s report.
“I am never surprised by what they do ... but what prompted me to [release the
statement] is the fabrication of a fake story.”
Al-Akhbar, known for its close ties to Hezbollah, reported that Laheeb was
detained by the Lebanese Army earlier this week for attempting to transfer
$280,000 to the kidnappers of Lebanese soldiers and policemen.
The money was seen as a bribe to prevent the militants from carrying out their
threat of killing one of the hostages.
Quoting high-ranking political sources, the report said Laheeb was detained near
the border as he made his way to the outskirts of Arsal, where the Islamist
militants are believed to be hiding, to prevent them from executing a soldier.
The Army refused to release Laheeb and referred him to the public prosecutor’s
office, the paper said, adding that the money was secured "from secret
expenditures of Lebanese agencies not included in the state budget."
Al-Akhbar also said that Health Minister Wael Abu Faour stepped in and
transferred the amount after Rifi’s failed attempt, reportedly ticking off Maj.
Gen. Abbas Ibrahim, head of General Security.
Ibrahim is tasked by the government with following up on the hostage crisis and
has recently said he was willing to abandon the case if disruptions continued.
In his statement, Rifi said Laheeb resided in the minister’s Tripoli home.
“Deeb al-Laheeb, a member of my security detail, is in my home in Tripoli now
and he is bedridden because of back pain, which has left him incapacitated for a
long time. He did not go to the Bekaa, did not carry $280,000 nor was he
detained,” he said.“I owe it to you [the public] to reveal this intelligence publication for what
it is ... I vow to you, honorable Lebanese leaders and citizens, that I will
always confront their destructive projects.”
“Those who confronted the conspiracy of the Syrian regime and responded to their
terror and assassinations, will not be intimidated by some moral assassination.”Hours after he released the statement, Rifi invited the media into his Tripoli
home, where Laheeb was lying on a bed with his wife standing next to him.
Rifi, sitting on a chair next to Laheeb, said the bodyguard has been bedridden
for over two months while the said he would file a lawsuit against Al-Akhbar for
defamation.
Hezbollah Reportedly Under Severe
Strain From Syrian Civil War
October 31, 2014 /Author: avatar JNS.org/ the Algemeiner
JNS.org – The Lebanese terror group Hezbollah has come under severe strain from
its involvement in the Syrian civil war and from increasing attacks inside of
Lebanon from Syrian jihadists. According to reports, as many as 5,000 Hezbollah
fighters are thought to be in Syria, and hundreds of them have been killed
fighting in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. “Hezbollah is spread
thin. They are waging so many battles and are positioned on so many fronts,”
Imad Salamey, associate professor of political science at the Beirut-based
Lebanese American University, told the Washington Post. At the same time,
jihadists from the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra terror groups are spilling
into Lebanon and launching attacks against Hezbollah strongholds, including a
bloody attack on Oct. 5 that killed eight Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon’s Bekaa
Valley. Meanwhile, more than 1,000 foreign fighters are heading into Syria each
month to join Islamic State and other jihadist groups, despite airstrikes by the
U.S. and its allies as well as efforts to prevent would-be jihadists from
entering Syria. “The flow of fighters making their way to Syria remains
constant, so the overall number continues to rise,” a U.S. intelligence official
said, the Washington Post reported.
How Hezbollah indoctrinates
preschoolers to embrace 'resistance' against Israel
http://khaledalameddine.wordpress.com/
Video
http://youtu.be/sDKhNOjTLE0
Lebanese journalist Khaled Alameddine posted images of Mahdi
magazine, a children's workbook issued by the Shi'ite terrorist organization.
Hezbollah, the Shi’ite terrorist organization in Lebanon, wastes little time in
raising the next generation of jihadists determined to fight Israel.A Lebanese
journalism student posted an item on his blog which features a children’s
magazine geared toward preschoolers who are taught the merits of “resistance”
and “martyrdom.” Mahdi Magazine is a monthly magazine issued by Hezbollah’s
youth scout movement, which also bears the name “Mahdi.” (According to Shi’ite
Islamic doctrine, the Mahdi is the redeemer of Islam who will rule for up to 19
years before the coming of the Day of Judgment, after which he will rid the
world of evil.) The magazine features colorful illustrations, rhymes, poems, and
written exercises interspersed with military terminology, battle lore from
Hezbollah’s wars fought with Israel, and short stories honoring fallen Hezbollah
fighters. The cover features a large birthday cake sitting atop a school bus,
all under the heading “I resist.”The magazine also includes an instruction guide
for parents designed to aid them in indoctrinating “the idea of
resistance.”Children leafing through the magazine are also taught that “the
reason behind your nationalism should be the love of the resistance.”Perhaps
most disturbing of all is the military imagery used in the magazine, where one
can see illustrations and drawings of children dressed in military uniform while
sitting on a tank. There is also the “grenade and assault rifle pattern
exercise” as well as one inventive game known as “help the bunny cross the
minefield.” Children are also given a coloring exercise which involves filling
in the illustration of a Hezbollah terrorist as he is praying near the
battlefront, an assault rifle just a few feet away.
The contents of the magazine was posted by a Lebanese journalist, Khaled
Alameddine.
Pain lingers as violence fades in
north Lebanon
Nov. 01, 2014
Kareem Shaheen| The Daily Star
TRIPOLI, Lebanon: “My brothers, this is the truth, not a fiery sermon,” the
sheikh said as he rose moments before the Friday prayers. “We have been struck
by many fires and we have suffered the consequences of many things we do not
believe in.”The preacher, Sheikh Abu Sufyan, spoke from his pulpit at the
Abdullah bin Massoud Mosque in Bab al-Tabbaneh, an austere prayer house with
straw mats.
This was the mosque in which fugitive militants Shadi al-Mawlawi and Osama
Mansur were allegedly hiding during the latest Army campaign in Tripoli –
although some in the neighborhood, the hardest-hit in the fighting, said they
had left Bab al-Tabbaneh earlier.
Order and calm had returned to the neighborhood by Friday. Teams of three or
four soldiers were stationed at various points in the embattled district, and
merchants and shop owners had returned to their stalls. Traders at the historic
vegetable market hawked all kinds of produce and residents walked in the tiny
streets again.
But a sense of melancholy permeated the embattled neighborhood, whose civilians
suffered through rounds of violence with the neighboring Alawite-majority Jabal
Mohsen over the Syrian war, only to endure the fallout of clashes between the
Army and militants.
Friday’s sermon at the bin Massoud Mosque emphasized the need for nonviolence,
and told residents to be patient and endure their suffering.
The preacher said the entire city should not bear the responsibility for
mistakes made by individuals, but also complained that the neighborhood had been
collectively punished by the actions of a few.
“If some people err, are all punished? If one of the soldiers insults me, is it
permissible to blame all or to hold the entire state accountable for the actions
of one soldier?” the preacher said.
“To the Lebanese state, you would not accept that, and you are right, and we
also do not accept that an entire nation is attacked under the excuse of
terrorism. “The state did oppress, and it knows that. If you were looking for
some individuals then search for them, you have numerous soldiers.”
But the preacher also urged nonviolence and patience by residents. “No Muslim is
permitted to kill anyone or to attack anyone,” he said. “But we also advise all
those who have authority to be just with the people.”
“Have patience, God will bring ease after suffering. God will question every
terrorist who cast fear on people, and God will question everyone who
transgressed against people.”The fighting has exacerbated the poverty that has
long beset this neighborhood. Unemployment is high among youth, and residents
say the poverty allows politicians and extremists to exploit young men. They
complain that they face pressure outside the neighborhood, and employers refuse
to hire Bab al-Tabbaneh’s residents. In addition, religious conservatives in the
area said they were the targets of discrimination. “Unemployment will cause
youth to do anything,” said Essam al-Sheikh, a local mosque imam.
Sheikh said any extremism that emerges among the neighborhood’s youth is a
result of the supposed dominance of Hezbollah within the apparatus of the
Lebanese government. Many here oppose the party’s policies, particularly its use
of arms in the May 2008 clashes in Lebanon and its intervention in Syria.
But he said those who do become radicals were from within the neighborhood,
dismissing allegations that any outside organizations like ISIS or the Nusra
Front were taking hold.
Residents mostly complained that a large-scale offensive was not necessary to
clear the neighborhood, and that the Army was capable of simply arresting
suspected militants, which they numbered as a maximum of 20. They also believe
the use of helicopters was excessive.
They also said the Army ought to have given them more warning before launching
the attack – even though the military did allow a cease-fire to evacuate
civilians.
Mahmoud al-Sheikh’s son, Ali, was one who did not escape on time.
Ali, who was almost 9 years old, was killed during the fighting. The father said
his son was waving at an Army helicopter from their verandah, before shrapnel
from a rocket pierced the boy’s stomach, chest and thighs. He was rushed to the
Lebanese Red Cross, but died on the operating table.
“He was crying ‘Dad don’t leave me,’” Ali’s grandmother said. “May you never
endure such a thing.”
The father, Mahmoud, looked haggard as he described his ordeal.
“He was waving to the helicopter. Then he came inside to me carrying his leg and
his guts were falling out.”
Mahmoud said his home should not have been targeted – that it was neutral, by
the main road outside Bab al-Tabbaneh, and was housing a dozen other children,
nephews and nieces, at the time of the fighting because it was seen as safer. In
its myriad campaigns against terrorism, the Army has always taken major
precautions to avoid civilian casualties. Speaking to The Daily Star, an Army
source denied that Army helicopters bombarded Bab al-Tabbaneh. “We never use air
force against crowded areas.” The source said that it was not possible to give a
warning for residents to evacuate ahead of time, explaining that the battle was
very fast. Mahmoud said he supported the Army and the state and stood against
terrorism, but said residents should have been warned to leave the neighborhood
and that politicians on both sides of the aisle had fooled the people. For now,
Mahmoud has decided to stay with his family at a home close to Tripoli’s center.
He said he could not go back to Bab al-Tabbaneh.
“Imagine, how can I go back home? And see my son’s blood still there?” he asked.
Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai
condemns tripartite power-sharing idea
Nov. 01, 2014/The Daily Star/BEIRUT: Maronite Patriarch Beshara
Rai said Friday that some political parties in the country wanted to change the
country’s power-sharing governance formula between Muslims and Christians, and
expressed his strong opposition to the idea. “MPs did not elect a president,
because they are waiting for a signal from certain states,” said Rai, who is on
a trip to Australia. “A dangerous thing is happening now, which I did not
believe before could happen, which is that they [certain MPs] want a conference
to reconsider Lebanon as an entity and they want a tripartite power-sharing
formula,” Rai said. Rivals of Hezbollah often accuse the party of seeking
tripartite power-sharing between Shiites, Sunnis and Christians, a claim the
party strongly denies. Any new formula would replace the current equal
power-sharing between Muslims and Christians. “I say that we will not accept a
tripartite power-sharing formula or any conference [to reconsider the Lebanese
political system],” Rai said. Rai lashed out at various political factions for
failing to elect a president. “It is unacceptable that MPs in Lebanon do not
elect a president,” he said. “In the Australian Parliament, the opposition and
loyalist parties sit together in Parliament. None of them is absent from the
session.”Lebanon plunged into a presidential vacuum on May 25. Since then, there
have been 14 failed attempts to elect a successor to Michel Sleiman. Most March
8 lawmakers are boycotting every Parliament session to elect a president, saying
that they would only take part in a session to elect a president if the
candidate had been agreed upon ahead of time. “Unfortunately, every [political]
group has an affiliation with an external power,” Rai said. The head of the
Maronite Church highlighted the need to respect both the Constitution and the
National Pact, an unwritten arrangement that laid the foundation of Lebanon as a
multi-confessional state.
Patriarch al-Rahi: I Will Soon 'Spill
the Beans'
Naharnet/Nov. 01, 2014/Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi lamented on Friday the
“make or break” moral that the political parties raise their youth on, stressing
that Lebanese politicians are still waiting for a green-light from foreign
countries to elect a head of state. “Soon I will spill the beans,” said the
Patriarch, expressing resentment at the almost five month delay in electing a
president. He made his remarks during his ongoing trip to Sydney, Australia. The
politicians are still waiting for a green-light from abroad to elect a head of
state, he was quoted as saying. “I have come to the conviction that they want to
change the Lebanese entity. They want a tripartite coalition government which we
strongly reject,” he concluded.
Lebanon has been left without a president since May when the term of President
Michel Suleiman ended. Ongoing disputes between the rival March 8 and 14 camps
have thwarted the election of his successor.
Saudi ambassador hits back after
Nasrallah comments
The Daily StarظNov. 01, 2014/BEIRUT: Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon
Ali Awad Asiri said Friday that recent remarks made by Hezbollah leader about
the monarchy were not in Lebanon’s interest.
“I ask: Does what [Hezbollah Secretary-General] Sayyed Hasan [Nasrallah] said
serve Lebanon’s interests and serve the situation we’re trying to resolve?”
Asiri said. “King Abdullah exerted utmost efforts in support of dialogue between
sects and we should concentrate on what benefits the nation and unites rather
divides it,”He said there should be dialogue between all the religions and
sects. Nasrallah said earlier this week during a gathering to mark Ashoura that
it was Saudi Arabia’s responsibility to stop the spread of takfiri ideologies in
the region. “Sayyed Nasrallah and all Lebanese know what the kingdom did and no
Lebanese can ignore this,” Asiri said. “I remind Sayyed Nasrallah of what the
kingdom did after the July 2006 war and of how many buildings for the [Shiite]
sect itself the kingdom has rebuilt,” Asiri said, in reference to Saudi support
of reconstruction efforts in Lebanon after Israel’s 2006 war against the
country. “What harms Lebanon’s interests under the current circumstances is not
what we need.”
Hezbollah is backed by Iran and Syria, the regional foes of Saudi Arabia.
Lebanon:
Extension vote For Extending Paliament term secured, most Christians not on
board
Hussein Dakroub| The Daily Star
Nov. 01, 2014
BEIRUT: Although key Christian parties are split over next week’s session on the
extension of Parliament’s mandate, a majority of lawmakers are widely expected
to endorse the controversial move in a bid to prevent the country from sinking
into further political chaos.
Lawmakers from the Kataeb Party and the Lebanese Forces will attend Wednesday’s
legislative session and vote against a draft proposal to extend Parliament’s
mandate for two years and seven months, officials from the two parties said
Friday. “The five Kataeb MPs will attend Wednesday’s session and vote against
the extension proposal,” a senior Kataeb official told The Daily Star. The
official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he expected MPs from the LF
and MP Michel Aoun’s Change and Reform bloc to join the Kataeb Party in voting
against the extension bill. “All Christian lawmakers will attend to ensure the
constitutionality of the session as demanded by Speaker Nabih Berri,” he said.
He added that only Marada Movement leader MP Sleiman Frangieh’s bloc would vote
for the extension proposal, in addition to independent Christian MPs and
Christian MPs from the Future Movement, Berri’s bloc and MP Walid Jumblatt’s
bloc.
Lebanese Forces MP Antoine Zahra said that the party’s eight lawmakers would
attend the session, but no decision had been taken yet on whether to vote for or
against the extension proposal. “More than half of Christian lawmakers will
attend the session on the extension of Parliament’s term,” Zahra told The Daily
Star. He said the LF’s decision on voting would be taken ahead of Wednesday’s
session. However, a senior LF source said the eight Lebanese Forces lawmakers
would attend the session and vote against the extension bill. The Daily Star’s
attempts to reach MPs from Aoun’s bloc were unsuccessful, even though the Free
Patriotic Movement leader has repeatedly vowed to oppose any new extension of
Parliament’s term, which expires on Nov. 20. Aoun’s bloc had opposed and
challenged the first extension of Parliament’s mandate for 17 months in May last
year.
In an interview with Al-Manar TV Friday night, Education Minister Elias Abou
Saab said MPs from Aoun’s bloc would attend the session and vote against the
extension of Parliament’s term. Culture Minister Raymond Areiji, who represents
Frangieh’s Marada Movement in the Cabinet, said his party would vote on the
extension of Parliament’s mandate.“The Marada Movement has taken a firm decision
to attend the legislative session to vote for Parliament’s extension,” Areiji
told the Voice of Lebanon radio station. “We reject a vacuum and consider
the extension as the lesser of two evils,” he added. Berri has scheduled a
legislative session for Nov. 5 to vote on a number of draft laws, including one
that would extend Parliament’s mandate.
Berri, who had initially opposed the extension of Parliament’s term, has joined
the Future Movement in calling for the extension, arguing that it would be
unconstitutional to form a new government during a presidential vacuum if
parliamentary elections were to be held.
However, Berri warned Thursday that if the major Christian blocs, namely the
FPM, the Kataeb Party, the LF and the Marada Movement, did not attend, the
session would not be held. The FPM, the LF and the Kataeb Party have spoken out
against the extension, but it is unlikely that their lawmakers would boycott the
session.LF George Adwan, who met Berri Friday to discuss next week’s Parliament
session, said the speaker had told him that he wanted Christian participation in
the voting on the extension and not just the presence of Christian lawmakers.
Berri also met at his residence in Ain al-Tineh with Zahle MP Nicolas Fattoush
who has presented a draft proposal that calls for the extension of Parliament’s
term for two years and seven months.
Deputy Speaker Farid Makari rejected Berri’s argument that the four major
Christian parties represented the “Christian nerve.” He said more than half of
Christian MPs do not belong to political parties.“The presence of Christian
lawmakers, whether they belong to parties or are independent, will give a
constitutional character to the session,” Makari told the Central News Agency.
He added that Wednesday’s session would be in line with the country’s National
Pact because MPs from the Marada Movement, the Tashnag Party and independent
Christian lawmakers would attend. Telecommunications Minister Boutros Harb said
the March 14 coalition would be forced to choose the lesser of two evils when
its lawmakers vote next week to extend Parliament’s mandate, blaming Aoun and
Hezbollah for putting the coalition in such a situation. “Some officials were
faced with two options: Either we surrender to the political game, or confront
it and have the needed courage to make tough decisions. ... They presented us
with difficult decisions which alone can spare the country a disaster,” Harb
told a news conference in Parliament. “So we decided to confront it because
there is no other alternative ... as we find ourselves forced to accept what we
would have never accepted under normal circumstances: An exceptional repulsive
extension of Parliament’s mandate until a president is elected,” said Harb, an
independent Christian MP allied with the March 14 bloc. He added that the March
14 coalition was forced to choose the extension after the FPM and Hezbollah had
obstructed the presidential vote with their persistent boycott of parliamentary
sessions to elect a president.
A Century After 1914
By Paul Salem | Vice President for Policy and Research
Oct 31, 2014
http://www.mei.edu/content/article/century-after-1914
A version of this article appeared in Arabic in the Al-Hayat newspaper on
Friday, October 31.
As 2014 draws to a close, it is striking to reflect on the parallels between
1914 and 2014, and to consider that the global and Middle East regional orders
could be in the process of undergoing changes as profound as the changes that
were unleashed in 1914.
A century ago a long period of British global hegemony was declining and new
powers were challenging its predominant position. The British navy dominated the
seven seas, and Britain led the world in technology and industrialization. It
had presided over a fairly stable global order for decades. As other countries
in Europe, Asia, and North America caught up with Britain, this unipolar world
began to fall apart. Today the United States is the declining global power, and
its brief period of unipolar hegemony after the collapse of the Soviet Union
might be drawing to an end, albeit slowly. Stymied in the Middle East and
challenged in Eastern Europe and East Asia, the U.S. grip on global power is
slipping.
A century ago powerful social upheavals were challenging established political
orders that had prevailed for centuries. Peoples were revolting against social
injustice, poverty and unemployment, and corrupt government. These profound
social problems challenged the established political orders of the day and
fuelled powerful ideological movements of the left and right, including
socialism, communism, and ethnic and linguistic nationalism, as well as
pro-democracy movements and religious or sectarian extremism. Today we see
similar upheavals, not only in the Arab world, but also recently in Iran, and
intermittently in China, Russia, and parts of the Americas.
Today we have the rise of terrorism; a century ago it was called anarchism. But
the methods of using theatrical violence, car bombs, and assassination are in
many ways the same. The assassination of a symbol of old world power, Archduke
Franz Ferdinand of Austria, is not altogether dissimilar to the attacks on the
symbols of power on September 11, 2001. Both acts unleashed years of armed
conflict.
Today we have the Internet, which spreads news and moods across the globe in a
flash; a century ago the world was waking up to the power of instant
communication brought about by the telegraph. Shots fired in Sarajevo were
suddenly heard around the world, and developments raced forward furiously, much
faster than old political systems were able to manage and contain.
A century ago rapidly changing military technology was destabilizing power
balances that had been established on the basis of large wooden fleets and
armies on horseback. Mechanized artillery and infantry and the rise of air power
would change all that. Today the dominance of naval fleets and modern air forces
is being challenged by the asymmetrical methods of non-state actors, the slow
proliferation of nuclear weapons, and the changing dynamics of drone and cyber
warfare.
A century ago, the disintegration of the Balkans provided the flash point for
global conflict; today the many crises of the Middle East are testing the
stability of global order. Yesterday, East and West almost went to war over the
expansion of Israel and recurring Arab-Israeli conflicts. Today, global and
regional powers are drawn into the war against ISIS and for control of the
Levant. Tomorrow, East and West might clash over the future control of Gulf oil
as U.S. needs decline and the thirst of Asia for the region’s hydrocarbons
escalates.
The Middle East itself is going through crises today not altogether different
than those of a century ago. An old Ottoman order was being challenged by
domestic demands for progress and change and by external pressures and
incursions from a shifting global order. Old imperial principles of government
were being challenged by new movements of ethnic, linguistic, and territorial
nationalism as well as by religious movements. The role of religion in politics
was being contested from both sides—from those who pushed for secularism and
from those who thought religion should be revived and more strictly enforced.
The role of women was also being contested between those who sought women’s full
and real equality and patriarchal traditionalists who sought to keep women
confined to a subordinate and second-class position.
A century ago the collapse of the old order began with great promise in the Arab
revolt but ended bitterly with the Sykes Picot agreement, the Balfour
declaration, and years of Western colonial domination. More recently the
uprisings against the established Arab order started with great hopes for a
better future, but have ended bitterly for too many countries that have
collapsed into state failure and ethnic or sectarian civil war.
The world will have to contend with the challenges of global change, the rise of
China, the gradual decline of Western power, and the many challenges of global
economic growth, security, and climate change.
The Arab world must contend with many of the challenges that are still
unresolved from the last century. In the Levant the state borders that were
established by the Sykes Picot agreement are gone, perhaps never to be revived.
Lebanon and Jordan are still managing to survive, but Syria and Iraq no longer
exist as nation states. In effect there are two Shi‘i/Alawi states, a rising
Kurdish state, and an emerging Sunni state of “Syriaq” in between. Yemen is also
disintegrating along sectarian and territorial lines, while Libya is tearing
itself apart along territorial, tribal, and Islamist/secularist lines.
The question of governance has also been left unresolved between various models
of Islamist authoritarianism, monarchical or military rule, and delicate
experiments in democracy. The role of religion has come back with a vengeance
with claims to rebuild the caliphate, while women still struggle to assert their
rights for full political and economic participation, or at least against being
sold into slavery or not being sexually harassed or assaulted in public.
The Arab regional order itself is also broken. For most of the past century, an
expansionist and interventionist Israel was the main challenge; today, Iran’s
interventions from the Levant and Gaza all the way to Yemen pose the strongest
threat to Arab order.
Change brings risks but also new horizons, and every crisis can also be turned
into an opportunity. The upheavals of World War I ushered in a new world for the
Middle East that eventually created conditions for national liberation and many
forms of socioeconomic progress. But unlike most countries in Asia, Europe, and
the Americas, the Middle East did not take advantage of the opportunities of the
last decades of the twentieth century, and instead of leaping forward in terms
of economic and political development, most Arab states stagnated. Let us hope
that the region learns from the lessons of the past and the crises of the
present to look for ways to build a more stable and sustainable future.
Selective memory: Iran's role in the Marine barracks
bombing
Tony Badran/01/11/2014/Lebanon Now
As the US moves closer to Iran it has placed the onus of the 1983 Marine
barracks bombing on Imad Mughniyeh, even though it was an Iranian operation from
top to bottom.
Last Thursday marked the 31st anniversary of Hezbollah's twin attack on the US
Marine barracks and the French paratroopers base in Beirut in 1983. The date
passed quietly; ancient history as far as the Obama White House is concerned.
After all, this is the era of US rapprochement with Iran. Under the banner of
combating Sunni terrorist groups, which are now defined as the principal threat,
Washington has effectively aligned with Iran and its assets. Today, the US is
not only providing air cover for Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) and
communicating with its command in Iraq, it has even indirectly shared
intelligence with the Guards' Hezbollah arm in Lebanon.
As such, when Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif placed a wreath earlier this
year on the grave of former Hezbollah commander Imad Mughniyeh — the man who
oversaw the attacks — the White House issued an awkwardly worded condemnation.
The statement placed the onus for the terrorist bombings on Mughniyeh alone,
drawing a subtle distinction between him and Iran. The White House, in its quest
to appease Tehran, deliberately obfuscated both the nature of Iran’s
relationship with Mughniyeh as well as Tehran's role in the 1983 bombings.
Mughniyeh has long been the subject of all kinds of theories, and his beginnings
as an Iranian operative remain shrouded in confusion. It’s widely known that
Mughniyeh first began his life as a militant with the Palestinian Fatah
organization. However, the details of this association have not been well
understood, and some of the specifics are murky.
For instance, it’s usually said that Mughniyeh was part of Fatah’s elite
intelligence unit, Force 17, which also handled security for Yasser Arafat and
the senior leadership. However, figures with direct knowledge of Mughniyeh’s
association with Fatah paint a different picture. They deny that Mughniyeh was
part of Force 17 or that he was Arafat’s bodyguard. Rather, Mughniyeh was one of
several young religious Shiites who received training at the hands of Fatah,
without being actual members of the organization. This was in 1976, when
Mughniyeh was not yet 15 years old. Training these young Shiites, as well as
various Iranian anti-Shah cadres working in Lebanon at the time, was supervised
by Abu Jihad (Khalil al-Wazir).
Some of the accounts that maintain Mughniyeh was a member of Force 17 have
claimed that he was brought in by the head of the unit, Ali Hassan Salameh.
However, there might be some confusion here as well, involving another man with
a similar name: Ali Deeb, a.k.a., Abu Hassan Khodor Salameh. Also a Lebanese
Shiite, and a few years Mughniyeh’s senior, Deeb was working with Fatah.
According to this account, promoted by Hezbollah’s circles, Deeb, who later
became a senior Hezbollah operative and was assassinated by Israel in 1999, was
the one who took in the younger Mughniyeh.
But Mughniyeh’s true recruiter was someone else; an Iraqi-Iranian operative
called Mohammad Saleh Hosseini. A devotee of Imam Khomeini, Hosseini had been in
Lebanon since 1970 where he worked briefly with Imam Musa Sadr. Hosseini had
contacts with Fateh since his days in Iraq. When he came to Lebanon, Hosseini
worked directly with young Shiites and, like other senior Khomeinist cadres
operating in Lebanon at the time, maintained close ties with the leaders of
Fatah’s Student Battalion, where Mughniyeh and his friends sought training.
Hosseini’s task was to cultivate these militant and religious young Shiites to
become followers of Khomeini. Sure enough, Mughniyeh became a fervent disciple
in the line of Imam Khomeini. This was Mughniyeh’s induction into the Khomeinist
revolutionary circle, which was run by men who would become senior leaders in
the IRGC.
According to leading Hezbollah expert Shimon Shapira, Hosseini maintained a
close connection with Mughniyeh between 1976 and 1981, when Hosseini was
assassinated in Beirut. By then, the Iranians had made the decision to establish
their own group in Lebanon, drawing on the young assets, like Mughniyeh, that
they had cultivated since the 1970’s.
Shapira, who has tracked Mughniyeh’s career for many years, says that following
Hosseini’s assassination, two other Iranian figures came to exert the biggest
influence on Mughniyeh. They are Ali Akbar Mohtashami, former ambassador to
Syria, and Hossein Dehghan, the current defense minister.
In one account, Mohtashami met with Mughniyeh and Abbas Musawi in Tehran in
1981, and held initial discussions about training and building up the
Khomeinists’ own organization in Lebanon: Hezbollah. As ambassador to Damascus,
Mohtashami was well placed to facilitate the arrival of an IRGC contingent to
Lebanon. And in 1982, the IRGC training corps entered the Bekaa, led by Dehghan.
By 1983, Dehghan had become the commander of the IRGC force in Lebanon. During
this critical period between 1982-83, “Dehghan took Mughniyeh under his wing,”
Shapira says. “He was his operator.”
If Dehghan was Mughniyeh’s handler, Mohtashami was “one level above that,”
Shapira says. This is the command hierarchy behind the attacks in 1983. Although
Mughniyeh is often described as the “mastermind” of the attacks, in fact, he was
the tactical commander who directly oversaw the mission. The planning and
financing of the operation was Iranian.
At the time, the US National Security Agency intercepted traffic between Tehran
and Mohtashami. The intercepts revealed how Hezbollah reported to Mohtashami,
and acted on orders that came from the IRGC command and the Ministry of
Intelligence and Security. They also uncovered that not only was Tehran
providing financing and logistical support, but also it was issuing directives
to Mohtashami to have their assets in Lebanon “take spectacular action against
the United States Marines.” That particular intercept happened on September 24,
1983, a month before the attack happened.
Mohtashami would later explain that Mughniyeh was responsible for carrying out
special operations. But the chain of command ran from Tehran to Mohtashami in
Damascus, to IRGC commander Dehghan, who handled Mughniyeh in Beirut. It was an
Iranian operation from top to bottom.
The regime and its institutions responsible for the attacks remain unchanged —
best evidenced by Dehghan’s senior position in the Iranian power structure. The
regime’s outlook and objectives are likewise unreconstructed. Instead, the
change has happened on the other side, in Washington. Three decades after the
Beirut bombings, the shift in the current US administration's attitude toward
these same Iranian institutions is nothing short of surreal.
**Tony Badran is a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
He tweets @AcrossTheBay
Army raids refugee sites in northeast
Lebanon
Nov. 01, 2014/The Daily Star/BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army launched raids on Syrian
refugee gatherings in northeast Lebanon Saturday in search of militants, part of
a nationwide crackdown. The National News Agency said military units raided
refugee sites in Ain al-Shaab, located between Labweh and Arsal in the
northeastern region, looking for wanted suspects, including gunmen who took part
in attacks against the Army last weekend. Earlier in the day, local reports said
the Army foiled an attempt by a group of gunmen into Arsal from the Syrian side
of the border. The soldiers engaged in brief clashes with the militants.
Second suspect arrested in Islamic emirate scheme in
Lebanon
Nov. 01, 2014/The Daily Star/BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army said
Saturday that it arrested an accomplice of an alleged ISIS commander who worked
together to establish an Islamic emirate in north Lebanon. An Army unit arrested
Ghali Hadara in the northern region on suspicion of forming a terrorist cell in
coordination with Ahmad Mikati, an alleged ISIS commander, to establish an
Islamic emirate.
Last week, soldiers arrested Mikati who later confessed to plotting to taking
over several villages in Lebanon's northern Dinnieh region for the purpose of
establishing, according to the Army.
Mikati’s arrest triggered four days of clashes between Islamist militants and
the Army in Tripoli and other villages in the north. Since then and after the
military successfully drove out the armed groups, the military has launched
nationwide raids in search of suspects, detaining dozens and seizing several
arms caches. In its statement, the Army said Hadara fled to Bab al-Tabbaneh
after the military raided a location where his armed group had taken refuge. He
was arrested while trying to escape Bab al-Tabbaneh.
The Army also said it arrested Dany al-Danash who, along with others, fired at
an Army patrol unit in May. He is accused of tossing hand grenades at soldiers
and being involvement in the recent Tripoli clashes.
Danash was arrested while trying to flee Bab al-Tabbaneh using his brother's
identification card. The military said soldiers arrested a Lebanese, a Syrian
and a Palestinian for firing at an Army vehicle in October. The three are also
wanted over several charges including drug dealing and theft. Meanwhile, the
military discovered an arms cache Saturday near the Harba Mosque in Bab al-Tabbaneh,
a security source told The Daily Star, as other soldiers continue to comb the
neighborhood particularly the bastion of two prominent militant leaders there.
Qatar mediator concludes 3-day talks with Arsal jihadists
The Daily Star/Nov. 01, 2014 /ARSAL, Lebanon: The Qatari-appointed mediator
Saturday returned from the outskirts of the northeastern town of Arsal after
three days of talks with Islamist militants holding 27 soldiers and policemen
hostage, sources said.
The negotiations are the first serious sign of progress to free the servicemen
since their capture during a five-day battle with the Lebanese Army three months
ago. The mediator, tasked by Doha to negotiate the release of the hostages, held
meetings for the past three days with the Nusra Front and ISIS on the outskirts
of Arsal, a source familiar with the matter told The Star. The mediator had beeb
staying in Arsal, but traveled to Beirut Saturday afternoon. Lebanese officials
and Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim, who has been tasked by the government to follow up
on the case, have said that the militants have yet to issue their full demands
in exchange for the release of the captives, taken hostage in August during a
deadly battle with ISIS and Nusra militants.
ISIS has executed two soldiers while Nusra has killed one and has recently
threatened to kill another in a bid to pressure the Lebanese Army to ease its
measures on Tripoli, north Lebanon.
Sources told The Daily Star that the mediator had brought shipments of food with
him when he first traveled to the outskirts Thursday.
Local media reports Saturday said the aid was a sign of good will by Qatar. The
militants have demanded the release of Islamist detainees in Roumieh Prison held
on terror charges without trial for the release of soldiers. But Prime Minister
Tammam Salam has publicly rejected a swap deal to end the hostage ordeal. A
delegation from the Committee of Muslim Scholars met with the relatives of the
soldiers outside the Grand Serail and later told reporters that they would
resume negotiations only if the Lebanese government tasked them with such a
case.
With support for Syrians, the Iranian project fails
Abdulrahman al-Rashed /AAl Arabiya
Saturday, 1 November 2014
Iran is deploying all efforts to drag the United States to its side in the wide
regional battle, especially in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Gaza and Bahrain. This is the
first time that Iranians have changed their strategy, which in the past was
based on neutralizing the American power through threats or intimidation as in
Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon. Today, Tehran adopts a policy of rapprochement
with the Americans. Iran is presenting itself as a reliable ally for ending, not
just managing, regional crises. It is also portraying itself as is a regional
power that can protect major Western interests.
This new approach is a major shift in the Iranian strategy. It recognizes the
failure of the old policy which was based on creating troubles for the “Great
Satan” and imposing Iran as a nuclear power. Today, it is looking forward to a
comprehensive agreement with Washington that will mainly include the nuclear
project.
However, the Iranian regime has to come a long way to reach a broad agreement
beyond its nuclear file and become a partner in regional security. Tehran has to
prove it is capable of managing battles on the ground and impose its political
choices, whether in the face of terrorist organizations like ISIS, or through
enabling Baghdad to impose its authority over all Iraqi territories, defeating
the rebels in Syria, upholding the role of the Houthis and their allies in
Yemen, achieving stability in Lebanon through Hezbollah, and finally ensuring
good behavior of its ally in Gaza, Hamas.
Returning to the Syrian crisis
Achieving this mission is beyond the Iran’s capacity, but if it succeeds in one
crisis, like Syria for instance, it will be able to end the crisis in Iraq, and
it won’t be difficult to rein in Hamas in Gaza. What is being said about
American-Iranian rapprochement seems to be true but it is based on illusions
that Iran is capable of resolving difficult issues due to claims that Tehran is
party in those conflicts.
“The Iranian regime has to come a long way to reach a broad agreement beyond its
nuclear file and become a partner in regional security”
Abdulrahman al-Rashed
In my opinion, it is not difficult to prove that the Americans are mistaken in
believing that Iran is incredibly influential. In order for Iran to fail to
deceive the world into believing it is the golden key to the region, and in
order for us to prove that it is in fact a party that failed to resolve any
crisis, we must return to Syria.
This battle needs to be resolved. Iranians claim that they are about to resolve
it, trying to convince the international coalition, led by the United States, to
cooperate with them to support the Syrian army with intelligence and help it
crush terrorist groups and degrade the Free Syrian Army.
We can see that the United States is using the expression of “forcing Assad to
return to the negotiating table!” This is unclear and it could mean implementing
the old Russian-Iranian project to keep the Syrian regime in power and Assad as
president with some ministerial posts for the opposition. Here we have two types
of opposition: one is created by Assad himself and is totally rejected by the
majority of Syrians. The second is the legitimate opposition, which attended the
Geneva II conference earlier this year. Forcing Assad to negotiate instead of
resigning is in the interests of Iran. Through imposing a regime that suits it,
the Islamic Republic can later dominate Iraq and Lebanon to become almost the
only country that has the security guarantees of Israel’s safety and a powerful
actor for any future regional peace agreement.
It is important to understand the overall scene and not just the sporadic
battles, as we are facing a new shift in Iranian politics. We are dealing with
an American president, who appears to suffer from a phobia of the Middle East’s
problems that he eagerly wants to avoid. The American president believes that
Arabs are passing through an idle stage, especially with the absence of their
most powerful countries. President Barack Obama is perhaps ready for any
convenient deal, so he gave up on the 500 centrifuges sticking point to triple
that number, and is ready to lift sanctions on Iran without going through
Congress.
This all reflects his strong desire to reach a quick agreement, after which
Obama will score a media victory for a historic achievement. However, on the
long-term such a deal would empower Iran, which is the regional source of all
evils since 1979. The Americans will discover later that they have empowered the
forces of evil in the entire region.
The Arab world should thoroughly think about the seriousness of the consequences
of what is happening. This is not a conspiracy; it’s a chess game, and Syria is
the Queen. In my opinion, Syria is the Iranian strategic point of weakness and
it will be difficult for Iran to triumph there despite all claims. Unlike Iraq,
80 percent of the Syrian population is against any regime loyal to Iran, whether
headed by Assad or not. Today, the regime, is barely controlling one-third of
the country. The Free Syrian Army (FSA), despite it being shattered by ISIS and
al-Nusra Front, remains the only combat camp qualified for development and
governance later on. It represents all the components of the Syrian people. We
support and back the FSA, the United States will have to deal with this, and the
Iranian project to control the region will eventually fail. Consequently, Iran
will automatically become weaker in Lebanon and Iraq. Sadly, we have noticed a
decrease in the support for the FSA. There are only American promises for the
FSA, which even if fulfilled at a later stage, they will be conditioned by the
acceptance of an unfair deal in Damascus. This will weaken the FSA and not serve
its objectives; it will only be a military brigade in the American-Iranian
project for the new Syria.
Thus, the countries that are trying to wipe out the coalition and the FSA, such
as Turkey, should be aware that they are committing a serious political mistake.
The consequences of it will enable the Iranians to take over Damascus, similarly
to when they enabled Hezbollah to take over Beirut in the past decade, for which
the Lebanese and Arabs are sadly still paying the price for. They attacked the
moderate Lebanese side 10 years ago, and now they are doing the same to the
moderate Syrian civilian opposition.
Obama’s tormentors
Hisham Melhem/A;l Arabiya
Saturday, 1 November 2014
Next Tuesday, many voters participating in the mid-term elections will find
themselves on the horn of a dilemma. Trying to square an impossible electoral
circle, many will decide on how to punish President Obama and his party, while
not rewarding the Republicans. Welcome to dysfunctional America circa 2014.
President Obama’s approval is around 44%, and barely 21% of Americans approve of
the way the Republicans in Congress are handling their job. Only 14% of
Americans approve of how the divided Congress is handling its job. The mood of
the electorate is downbeat, with a majority of Americans saying that they cannot
trust the federal government in Washington to do what is right or its ability to
solve the big domestic and international problems facing the country from the
Ebola virus, to the new challenge of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
to Russia’s revival of Cold War tactics in the Ukraine and beyond.
The stakes
At stake in Tuesday’s election are all 435 House of Representatives seats, 36
Senate seats and 36 governorships as well as 146 ballot initiatives in 42 states
ranging from restricting abortion to legalizing marijuana, to providing
additional information about what ingredients are in the food people consume.
But the stakes go beyond the contested seats, because the elections are taking
place at a time of growing internal and international uncertainty about American
leadership and amid mounting questions about the ability of President Obama to
lead the country and protect its vital interests and the interests of its allies
during the last two years of his tenure.
We are accustomed to reading articles and books about the dysfunction in
Washington caused by entrenched partisanship and parochial politics, but in the
last few days we read a spate of articles about the dysfunction within the
administration implying that Obama is presiding over a “team of bumblers”,
lacking cohesion and clarity in the face of ISIS, and pursuing a disastrous
policy in Syria.
Big Mo belongs to the Republicans
Most opinion polls show that it is very hard for the Democrats to retain control
of the Senate and that the momentum which was once dubbed by the late President
Gerald Ford as “Big Mo,” belongs to the Republicans who are on the verge of
capturing the Senate and even enlarging their majority in the House of
Representatives, thus controlling both chambers of Congress for the first time
during Obama’s presidency. The Republicans need a net gain of six seats to win a
simple majority in the Senate and they have many paths that could lead them to
winning 51 seats.
“In recent years, the political and ideological polarization within the American
political system has reached its lowest levels since the 1850s”
Hisham Melhem
President Obama’s diminishing popularity, and his inability to pass any of his
priorities in his second term from Immigration reform to raising the minimum
wage, has made him radioactive to many Democratic candidates who shunned him and
refused to appear with him on the campaign trail as if he should be quarantined
at the White House until the elections are over. Senator Mary Landrieu
(Democrat- Louisiana) waded into that forbidden territory of race when she said
to NBC’s anchor Chick Todd “I will be very, very honest with you; the South has
not always been the friendliest place for African Americans.” Of course, these
Democratic candidates will always welcome the funds that the President has
consistently raised from the Democratic base, which despite its disillusionment
with some of his decisions, is still loyal to the promise of his 2008 campaign.
And once again, President Obama finds himself operating in the shadows of his
former formidable opponent and later collaborator Hillary Clinton and that old
reliable Democrat for all seasons Bill Clinton. And yet, watching the Democrats
and listening to their pleas for funds, and their calls on the base to turn out
and vote, given that many voters don’t bother with midterm elections, one senses
that the prize, that is the Senate will be lost. In fact you can hear some
Republican lawmakers and operatives sharpening their long knives and passing the
ammunition for the kill. The hostility some Republicans in Congress harbors
towards the President, some of it personal or related to his ethnic and social
background more so than to his political views, will likely lead them to spend
the next two years tormenting a president on the defensive, even if the
spectacle of such a display of crass Schadenfreude is damaging to the national
interest.
Decay and dysfunction
In recent years, the political and ideological polarization within the American
political system has reached its lowest levels since the 1850s when the Northern
and Southern states could not resolve their differences over slavery (whether to
extend the abominable institution to the western states) which was one of the
fundamental reasons that led to the civil war, the bloodiest and most traumatic
event in American history.
In a recent groundbreaking essay titled “America in decay”, historian Francis
Fukuyama posits that political decay occurs when institutions fail to adapt to
changing external circumstances either because of intellectual rigidities or
because of the ability of entrenched elites to block change. Fukuyama believes
that “this is precisely what has been happening in the United States in recent
decades, as many of its political institutions have become increasingly
dysfunctional”. He ominously adds, “And there is no guarantee that the situation
will change much without a major shock to the political order.” Of course we
don’t need a civil war to break the decay and dysfunction, but Fukuyama’s
warning is well taken.
Such dysfunction will become more salient if the Republicans win a majority in
the Senate. There are some analysts who would argue that the Republicans will be
forced to become less ideological and will seek common ground with the president
to avoid alienating the electorate in 2016. But if recent history is any guide,
and if some tea party candidates are elected, their roar and intimidating power
will immobilize any moderate Republicans seeking accommodation to pass important
legislation. More ominously, a president who already suffers from a perception
of leadership deficit will be weakened further in the eyes of his domestic
opponents and his international enemies, when bereft of congressional cover.
Even with a Democratic Senate Obama’s exercise of international leadership was
hesitant, tentative and wobbly as we have seen in the case of Syria and the
Ukraine.
A Republican Senate and its discontents
A Republican Senate will attempt to roll back as much as possible of President
Obama’s legacy, including repealing his signature achievement; the Affordable
Care Act (Obamacare), even though this will be an exercise in futility as most
analysts would say, but such exercise would appeal to the “hell no” wing of the
Republican party. There will be efforts to force Obama to allow for more oil and
gas exploration on federal land and expand off shore drilling, and push for a
vote on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline from Canada, which is opposed by
environmentalists and something that President Obama has resisted so far. The
proponents of these moves claim that such decisions will make the U.S.
self-sufficient in energy production and end its dependence on foreign oil. The
control of the Republicans of the committees of the Senate will give them the
powers to subpoena any senior official to testify in front of their committees.
These powers will make it practically impossible for the president to nominate
judges or ambassadors that the Republicans deem too liberal or progressive.
There is no reason to believe that the Senate that some Republicans dubbed a
legislative graveyard will cease to be so under Republican control. Washington
will be more toxic, acrimonious and paralyzed, for two more years, a period that
would feel like an eternity.
A Republican Senate will propel some of President Obama’s harshest critics such
as Senator John McCain into leadership positions. Senator McCain is expected to
become the Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee should Republicans
take the upper chamber. McCain and the other Senate leaders will try to put more
constraints on the ability of the Obama administration’s dealing with Iran and
will insist on preventing Iran from enriching Uranium and will seek tougher
sanctions on Tehran if the P-5 plus one negotiations with Iran collapse. In a
Republican Senate, calls for arming the Ukraine, a policy opposed by the Obama
administration, will be louder and will be supplemented by tougher sanctions on
Russia.
But the biggest confrontation between the Republican Senate and the Obama White
House will be fought in the fluid Syrian-Iraqi theatre where ISIS has been
challenging America’s supposedly formidable deterrence. Senator McCain has
criticized Obama’s limited military strategy against ISIS. He said recently that
“we may be able to ‘contain’ but to actually defeat ISIS is going to require
more boots on the ground, more vigorous strikes, more special forces, further
arming the Kurdish Peshmerga forces and creating a no-fly zone and buffer zone
in Syria”.
Criminal negligence
Recent press reports about the dysfunction within the Obama administration
regarding Syria will provide ammunition for a Republican Senate to expose the
inherent contradictions of the administration and its obfuscations about Syria.
A memo from the secretary of defense Chuck Hagel to National Security Advisor
Susan Rice warned that the administration’s strategy towards the future of
Syrian dictator Assad is not clear, and that this ambiguity would endanger the
international coalition, since some Arab partners are seeking explicitly the
demise of the Assad regime. Also the decision by the White House to write off
the Free Syrian Army’s active forces fighting ISIS and al-Nusra Front and
instead try to establish a new small force from scratch by recruiting fighters
from refugee camps in Turkey and Jordan, and then not task this force with
fighting ISIS or the Assad regime strikes many as another indication that the
Obama administration is not serious about confronting the Syrian regime.
A recent report in the Wall Street Journal quoted a senior U.S. defense official
working on Iraq as saying, “They [the U.S.] want to focus on ISIL [ISIS] and
they are worried about antagonizing the Iranians, which they say may cause them
to react –or the Shiite militias in Iraq to react –against our embassy and
interests in Iraq and derail the [nuclear] talks,” He added “They are
articulating in high-level interagency meetings that they don’t want to do
anything that’s interpreted by the Iranians as threatening to the regime” of
Bashar Assad. One could only imagine how senior Obama administration officials
being grilled in congressional hearings organized by newly minted Republican
chairmen.
Watching the numerous photos of Qasem Soleimani, Iran’s commander of the Quds
Force, a division of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, smiling
broadly with Peshmerga units and Iraqi Shiite militias, and observing his role
in Syria and in Lebanon as the de facto commander of Shiite forces, one is
tempted to call him Iran’s viceroy in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.
If the U.S. and Iran are moving towards a new ‘détente’ as the Wall Street
Journal is alleging, seeing a nuclear deal and the need to combat a new common
enemy, ISIS as the basis of such a ‘détente’, then Washington should not be
surprised if the Arab members of the international coalition see this
arrangement as extending Iran’s borders to the Mediterranean and ceding Iraq,
Syria and Lebanon to Iran’s political orbit. If the Republicans control the
Senate, one would hope to see a serious probe into the reasons why the Obama
administration has actually abandoned the Syrian people to the tender mercies of
the monstrosities called the Assad regime, ISIS and al-Nusra Front. President
Obama’s approach to the Syrian tragedy amounts to a massive, shameful criminal
negligence.
Persecution, torture, murder: Iran blasted on human rights
ahead of UN hearing
By Jonathan Wachtel/·FoxNews.com
Published October 31, 2014
On the eve of Iran's defense of its human rights record Friday before a key
United Nations panel, a lawyer for the woman executed in the Islamic Republic
over the weekend for allegedly killing her attempted rapist accused the regime
of widespread torture and murder.
A UN-appointed human rights advocate had already prepared a voluminous account
of Tehran's egregious transgressions, including persecution and imprisonment of
religious minorities, alarming numbers of executions and systematic disregard of
due process by Saturday, when Reyhaneh Jabbari, a 27-year-old woman who had
spent the last seven years in prison, was hanged. Jabbari became an
international symbol of the regime's brutality, with the UN and rights groups
such as Amnesty International decrying her death sentence. Jabbari's execution
served to punctuate this week's hearings, including the independent forum in
Geneva on Thursday and a procedure today before a UN Human Rights Council panel.
“I ask you to not allow for Iran to get away with lies.”
- Marina Nemat, former prisoner in Iran
"Because Reyhaneh Jabbari's case created a lot of attention inside and outside
of Iran, a lot of people tried to save Reyhaneh Jabbari, but because of the
power of Iran, on Saturday, they hanged her," Iranian Human Rights Attorney
Mohammed Mostafaei, who represented Jabbari as well as some 200 death penalty
defendants, told the independent watchdog group UN Watch on Thursday. "I'm sure
we can -- if the Iranian government stopped the death penalty -- we can improve
human rights in Iran."
Mostafaei, who represented Jabbari before fleeing Iran under threat, said
Iranian jurisprudence disregards the concept of intent in determining guilt and
meting out punishment, relying on sharia law. Once defendants are arrested,
coerced confessions are common, say critics.
On Friday, the UN Human Rights Council conducted its periodic review of Iran's
record in Geneva. Iran has long denied access to the UN’s independent experts
and so-called special rapporteurs, including Ahmed Shaheed, the world body's
special rapporteur on human rights in Iran. The meeting in Switzerland provided
a rare occasion for UN member states to engage with the Iranian authorities, who
have submitted a rebuttal which claims the regime does not engage in torture.
Iran's justice minister, Mostafa Pour Mohammadi, blamed Jabbari's death on the
west, and several allies of Tehran, including Venezuela and Belarus, actually
praised the Islamic Republic for defending human rights.
In this picture taken on Dec. 15, 2008, Iranian Reyhaneh Jabbari, center, sits
while attending her trial in a court in Tehran, Iran. Jabbari was hanged on
Saturday, Oct. 25, 2014, who was convicted of murdering a man she said was
trying to rape her, the official IRNA news agency reported. (AP)
According to a 28-page report submitted by Shaheed, some 852 people were
reportedly executed between July 2013 and June 2014 in “an alarming increase”
over already high rates from previous years. In 2014 alone, at least eight
people executed were believed to have been under the 18 at the time when they
allegedly committed their crimes.
While capital punishment is permitted under international law for cases
involving intentional homicide, Shaheed noted, Iran applies it to economic and
drug crimes and even homosexuality, a crime under Sharia law. In addition,
children often view the public executions, typically carried out by hanging
convicts from cranes in public.
"Eighty-percent of the 800 documented [executions] were for drug offenses,"
Shaheed said.
And the real problem, according to Shaheed, whose report notes prosecution of
journalists, labor and education activists and forced marriages of girls as
young as 9, is that Iranians cannot feel secure under the rule of law.
"When your rights aren't guaranteed [and] they depend upon the human fancy of
those in power, then you live in either self-denial or self-limitation," he
said. "There are reprisals against those who cooperate with international human
rights mechanisms. I think it is fair to say that there is a climate of fear in
terms of people not being able to exercise their rights fully."
The election more than a year ago of President Hassan Rouhani, who ran as a
moderate and stoked hopes of a more tolerant regime, has not brought about the
hoped-for reforms. Although some say the religious clerics who carry more power
in the Islamic Republic, are responsible for the continuing human rights
violations, critics say Rouhani could do more.
At least three American citizens are believed to be held in Iran, including
Pastor Saeed Abedini, a Boise, Idaho, married father of two who went back to his
homeland to help establish a secular orphanage and was imprisoned for
proselytizing; Amir Hekmati, a U.S. Marine who went to visit an ailing
grandparent and was arrested and accused of being a spy and Robert Levinson, a
former FBI and DEA agent who disappeared while investigating a cigarette
-smuggling ring in the Kish Islands and is now believed to be the longest-held
hostage in American history. Iran denies it is holding Levinson, but the State
Department says it is.
Thursday's hearing by UN Watch served as something of a prelude to the UN's
official inquiry on Friday. In addition to Mostafaei, the panel heard from
former prisoners of Iran’s infamous Evin Prison, who recalled the horrors they
endured. Marina Nemat, who was sent to Evin in 1981 at age 16 and says she was
interrogated and tortured and even raped and forced to marry a prison guard,
scoffed at Iran's defense of its human rights record.
"Iran doesn’t torture? Iran respects women’s rights?" an incredulous Nemat, now
a professor at University of Toronto, asked at Thursday's forum. "They hired a
fiction writer. I hope there is someone at the UN who would hold them
accountable.
“I ask you to not allow for Iran to get away with lies,” she said in a direct
appeal to today's UN gathering. “There are so many people who are more than
willing to testify against it."
**The Associated Press and FoxNews.com's Perry Chiaramonte contributed reporting
to this story.
Behind the lines: The Jihadi connection between Sinai, Gaza
and Islamic State
By JONATHAN SPYER/11/01/2014 /J.Post
What kind of relations do the jihadists of northern Sinai and Gaza have with
Islamic State, and with Hamas? Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi declared
a three-month national emergency this week, following the killing of over 31
Egyptian soldiers in a suicide car bombing carried out by jihadists in northern
Sinai.
No organization has issued an authoritative claim of responsibility for the
bombing, but it comes amid a state of open insurgency in northern Sinai, as
Egyptian security forces battle a number of jihadist organizations. Most
prominent among these groups are Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis and Majlis Shura al-Mujahideen;
the attack on the Sinai military base came a few days after an Egyptian court
sentenced seven members of Ansar Beit al-Maqdis to death for carrying out
previous attacks on the army.
In subsequent days, Egyptian officials pointed an accusing finger at the Hamas
rulers of Gaza, asserting there is “no doubt that elements belonging to
Palestinian factions were directly involved in the attack.” Cairo is now set to
build a new barrier separating the Strip from northern Sinai.
In a number of Arabic media outlets, unnamed Egyptian government sources openly
accused Hamas members of aiding the assault, assisting with planning, funding
and weapons supply.
Are the Egyptian claims credible? Are there links between Hamas or smaller
jihadist movements in the Gaza Strip and the insurgents in northern Sinai? And
no less importantly, is the armed campaign in northern Sinai linked to Islamic
State? First, it is important to understand that jihadist activity in northern
Sinai is not a new development. Long before the military coup of July 3, 2013,
and indeed before the downfall of president Hosni Mubarak in February 2011, this
area had become a lawless zone in which jihadists and Beduin smugglers of people
and goods carried out their activities.
Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis emerged from this already existing jihadist milieu in the
period following Mubarak’s ouster.
At this time, Egyptian security measures in the area sharply declined.
Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis has not confined its activities to the Sinai area; rather,
it has directly engaged in attacks on Israeli targets. Recently, the group
beheaded four Sinai locals who it accused of being “spies for the Mossad,” also
carrying out two rocket attacks on Eilat this past January.
The claim of links between Hamas and Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis has been raised in the
past. In September, Egyptian security forces claimed to have found uniforms and
weaponry identifiable as belonging to Hamas’s Izzadin Kassam brigades.
It is worth remembering that the current Egyptian government has, since its
inception, sought to link salafi jihadist terrorism with the Muslim Brotherhood
in Egypt, as part of its strategy of marginalizing and criminalizing the
Brotherhood.
The current statements seeking to link Hamas directly to Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis
may form part of this larger strategy.
For its part, Hamas indignantly denies any link to this week’s bombing.
But what can be said with greater confidence is there is, without doubt, a
burgeoning and violent salafi jihadist subculture which encompasses northern
Sinai and southern Gaza – with various organizations possessing members and
infrastructure on both sides of the border.
Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis itself and Majlis Shura al-Mujahideen both have members in
Sinai and Gaza. Working tunnels smuggling goods and weapons exist between Gaza
and northern Sinai, despite Egyptian attempts to destroy them. It is also a fact
that Hamas is aware of these tunnels and makes no attempt to act against them,
benefiting economically from their presence.
From this standpoint, Hamas authorities in Gaza are guilty by omission of
failing to act against the infrastructure supplying and supporting salafi
guerrillas in northern Sinai, whether or not the less verifiable claims of
direct Hamas links with them have a basis.
Given this reality, it is also not hard to understand the Egyptian determination
to build an effective physical barrier between the Strip and Egyptian territory.
What of the issue of support for Islamic State? Should these jihadist groups be
seen as a southern manifestation of the Sunni jihadist wave now sweeping across
Iraq, Syria and increasingly, Lebanon? From an ideological point of view,
certainly yes.
From an organizational point of view, the situation is more complex.
According to Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, an expert on jihadist groups currently
based at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya and the Middle East Forum,
neither Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis nor Majlis Shura al-Mujahideen have formally
pledged their allegiance to the caliphate established by Islamic State in parts
of Iraq and Syria.
Nevertheless, Tamimi confirmed, both organizations have expressed “support” for
Islamic State and its objectives, while not subordinating themselves to it
through a pledge of allegiance.
Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis is known to maintain contacts with Islamic State, which has
advised it on the mechanics of carrying out operations. Islamic State,
meanwhile, has publicly declared its support for the jihadists in northern
Sinai, without singling out any specific group for public support.
Tamimi further notes the existence of two smaller and more obscure groups in
Gaza with more direct links to Islamic State.
These are Jamaat Ansar al-Dawla al-Islamiya fi Bayt al-Maqdis (The Group of
Helpers/ Supporters of the Islamic State in Bayt al-Maqdis), which carries out
propaganda activities from Gaza and helps funnel volunteers to Syria and Iraq,
and the Sheikh Abu al-Nur al-Maqdisi Battalion, a Gazan contingent fighting with
Islamic State in these countries.
So, a number of conclusions can be drawn: Firstly, Hamas, in its tolerance of
and engagement with smuggling tunnels between Gaza and Sinai, at least
indirectly permits the jihadists networks operating these tunnels to wage their
insurgency against Egypt – even if the claims of a direct Hamas link to violent
activities in Sinai have not yet been conclusively proven.
Secondly, the most important organizations engaged in this insurgency support
Islamic State, and are supported by them, though the former have not yet pledged
allegiance and become directly subordinate to the latter.
Islamic State is not yet in northern Sinai, but its close allies are. Their
activities are tolerated by the Hamas rulers of the Gaza Strip – as long as they
are directed outward, against Egypt and Israel.
La voie de la paix
Farès SOUHAID* | OLJ
01/11/2014
Le Moyen-Orient se trouve actuellement à un tournant majeur de son histoire.
Face à ce tournant, les chrétiens sont perplexes, craintifs, voire même apeurés
et dépassés par les événements.
Leurs institutions ecclésiastiques et politiques semblent tétanisés devant
l'ampleur des changements en cours et affichent : « Cerveau en panne ! »
C'est au moment où notre intelligence est plus que jamais nécessaire pour
analyser et prendre des décisions qui pourraient assurer notre avenir et celui
de nos enfants que nous avons décidé d'abolir nos capacités intellectuelles et
de nous montrer inefficaces dans une région où s'entremêlent les conflits de
religion, les guerres d'influences entre puissances régionales, et les intérêts
internationaux. Pour être encore plus clair, les événements de la région ouvrent
la porte à une nouvelle réalité politique qui, après avoir traversé une période
transitionnelle incontournable, aboutira à de nouvelles données politiques,
sociales, économiques et autres.
Devant un changement qui se fait dans la douleur en Syrie, en Irak, dans le
Golfe jusqu'au Maghreb arabe, faut-il attendre, vingt ans peut-être, avant de
décider du choix à faire ? Faut-il tourner le dos aux événements en cours et
considérer qu'il s'agit d'une guerre interminable entre les deux ailes de
l'islam qui ne nous concerne pas? Ou bien faut-il tirer les leçons de nos
expériences passées pour essayer de prendre les bonnes décisions ?
Après la fin de la Première Guerre mondiale et la mise en place du mandat
franco-britannique, le monde a assisté à une série de changements qui étaient à
l'époque d'une importance capitale : la disparition de l'Empire ottoman, le
passage de l'Allemagne de la monarchie à la République, la victoire
franco-britannique et la révolution bolchevique.
Durant cette période, il y eut le massacre des Arméniens par l'armée des «
Jeunes Turcs » patronnée par Moustapha Kamal, un des rares généraux qui réussit
à surmonter l'effondrement de l'Empire pour se replier dans la région d'Alep.
À la même époque, les chrétiens de Mossoul furent massacrés, et les chaldéens,
les syriaques et d'autres contraints à l'exode.
Et c'est précisément face à ces bouleversements régionaux et internationaux que
notre Église d'Élias Hoayek avait opté pour un Grand Liban, en 1920, basé sur la
convivialité islamo-chrétienne ; cette même Église avait demandé au mandat la
création d'un Liban porteur d'un message de paix, elle avait rejeté l'idée du
Liban pays refuge des chrétiens de la région. Nous avions par la suite jeté les
bases d'une Constitution, en 1926, nous nous étions opposés au mandat français,
en 1943, et avions participé à la création de la Ligue arabe, puis à la
rédaction de la Déclaration universelle des droits de l'homme.
Nous sommes fiers, et parfois même arrogants (contrairement aux Tunisiens qui
réussissent en gardant une modestie exemplaire) :
– Nous sommes fiers parce que nous avons rejeté le statut de minorité apeurée en
faveur d'une communauté dynamique, aspirant sans cesse à consolider son
partenariat avec les autres.
– Nous sommes fiers parce que nous avons bénéficié de l'apport culturel assuré
par les congrégations religieuses françaises après les massacres de 1860, sans
pour autant croire que nos ancêtres étaient effectivement gaulois.
– Nous sommes fiers parce que, malgré le récit du général Jean d'Hautpoul sur le
massacre de Deir el-Qamar, nous avons réussi à triompher de nos blessures et à
établir de nouvelles relations avec les druzes de la Montagne, ainsi qu'avec
l'islam, basées sur la convivialité.
– Nous sommes fiers parce que notre opposition au mandat français a collaboré à
la création d'une identité politique arabe, après 400 ans d'Empire ottoman et 20
ans de mandat.
– Nous sommes fiers parce que ce choix a permis à nos jeunes ingénieurs, avocats,
médecins et cadres d'apporter leur pierre à l'édification du monde arabe dans un
climat d'entente culturelle et sociologique.
– Nous sommes fiers parce que nous n'avons pas eu recours à l'édification d'un
mur entre nous et le monde arabe pour délimiter des frontières culturelles et
politiques.
Une communauté qui a hérité d'un patrimoine aussi prestigieux dans le passé
devrait pouvoir trouver sa voie aujourd'hui. Cette voie est à portée de main, il
faut la saisir : notre rôle est de promouvoir la culture de la paix face à la
violence.
La paix entre les deux ailes de l'islam.
La paix entre juifs et musulmans, entre Israéliens et Arabes.
La paix entre les sociétés arabes et leurs régimes politiques.
La paix entre les deux rives de la Méditerranée.
La paix entre le monde arabe et l'Occident.
Notre société était globalisée avant la globalisation.
Notre Église est rattachée à Rome depuis près de 1 000 ans.
Les thèmes débattus par notre classe politique (la décentralisation, la loi
électorale...) ne suffisent plus à nous donner espoir. Il faut agir,
entreprendre, voir grand pour pouvoir surmonter nos peines quotidiennes. C'est
le moins que l'on puisse faire pour le Liban.
* Coordinateur général des forces du 14 Mars
New UK law would ban critics of Sharia from broadcasting,
protesting or even posting messages on Facebook
Robert SpencerOct 31/14
The last free person in Britain, if there is one, might as well turn out the
lights. If this becomes law, Britain is finished as a free society. As the law
would also forbid opposition to gay marriage, it would be interesting to see
what would happen if a proponent of Sharia protested against gay marriage — but
Muslim groups are largely for it, since it opens the door to the legalization of
polygamy.
In any case, future free historians, if there are any, will look back at David
Cameron and Theresa May as essentially saboteurs and traitors who administered
the coup de grace to their own nation as a free republic. If Britain were still
a sane society, as soon as this law was suggested there would have been a
no-confidence vote and the Conservative government would have fallen — followed
by the arrest of Cameron and May and criminal proceedings against them. Instead,
Britain appears prepared to go quietly, although civil war still very likely
looms in its future. “Sharia law or gay marriage critics would be branded
‘extremists’ under Tory plans, atheists and Christians warn,” by John Bingham,
the Telegraph, October 31, 2014:
Anyone who criticises Sharia law or gay marriage could be branded an “extremist”
under sweeping new powers planned by the Conservatives to combat terrorism, an
alliance of leading atheists and Christians fear.
Theresa May, the Home Secretary, unveiled plans last month for so-called
Extremism Disruption Orders, which would allow judges to ban people deemed
extremists from broadcasting, protesting in certain places or even posting
messages on Facebook or Twitter without permission. Mrs May outlined the
proposal in a speech at the Tory party conference in which she spoke about the
threat from the so-called Islamic State – also known as Isis and Isil – and the
Nigerian Islamist movement Boko Haram.
But George Osborne, the Chancellor, has made clear in a letter to constituents
that the aim of the orders would be to “eliminate extremism in all its forms”
and that they would be used to curtail the activities of those who “spread hate
but do not break laws”.
He explained that that the new orders, which will be in the Conservative
election manifesto, would extend to any activities that “justify hatred” against
people on the grounds of religion, sexual orientation, gender or disability.
.The obvious problem with this is that Leftists and Islamic supremacists
constantly advance the false claim that opposition to jihad terror and Islamic
supremacism is justifying hatred against people, and the Cameron government
clearly endorses this view — hence the ban on Pamela Geller and me. So this law
will be used to curtail any opposition to the advance of Sharia in the UK.
He also disclosed that anyone seeking to challenge such an order would have to
go the High Court, appealing on a point of law rather than fact.
The National Secular Society and the Christian institute – two organisations
with often diametrically opposing interests – said they shared fears that the
broad scope of extremism could represent a major threat to free speech.
Keith Porteous Wood, director of the NSS, said secularists might have to think
twice before criticising Christianity or Islam. He said secularists risk being
Islamophobic and racist because of their high profile campaigns against the
advance of Sharia law in the UK.
“The Government should have every tool possible to tackle extremism and
terrorism, but there is a huge arsenal of laws already in place and a much
better case needs to be made for introducing draconian measures such as
Extremism Disruption Orders, which are almost unchallengeable and deprive
individuals of their liberties,” he said.
“Without precise legislative definitions, deciding what are ‘harmful activities
of extremist individuals who spread hate’ is subjective and therefore open to
abuse now or by any future authoritarian government.”…
A Conservative spokesman said: “Freedom of expression and freedom of speech are
a vital part of a democratic society….
Yes, but obviously not of British society. Not anymore.
Jordan bans Halloween after Muslim Brotherhood condemns it as “homosexual and
Satanic”
Robert Spencer/Oct 31, 2014
“Allah did not create man so that he could have fun. The aim of creation was for
mankind to be put to the test through hardship and prayer. An Islamic regime
must be serious in every field. There are no jokes in Islam. There is no humor
in Islam. There is no fun in Islam. There can be no fun and joy in whatever is
serious.” — Ayatollah Khomeini
“Jordan bans ‘gay, Satanic’ Halloween,” by Darren Wee, GayStarNews, October 31,
2014 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
Jordan has banned Halloween fearing of a backlash from Muslim fundamentalists
who condemn the festival as ‘homosexual and Satanic.’Ministry of Interior
spokesperson Ziad Al Zoubi confirmed the decision to Al Ghad daily. He said all
sorts of activities surrounding Halloween had been banned to prevent a repeat of
the previous two years’ riots in the capital Amman. The ministry was forced to
make the ban public after several groups asked the department permission to hold
celebrations.
In 2012, the Muslim Brotherhood attacked Halloween celebrations and set fire to
a cafe where a party was being held. ‘We watched with disgust and shame last
night homosexual and Satanic rituals in an Amman cafe. This presents a challenge
to the values of the Jordanian people and their Arab and Muslim identity, as
well as a violation of religious laws,’ the group said in a statement on its
website. They even demanded the party organisers be tried for the ‘grotesque
act.’
IAEA: Iran stopped answering questions about nuclear arms
development
Ynetnews/11.01.14/ Israel News
NYT report cites Amano as saying Tehran failed to stand behind commitment to
provide information regarding past attempts to develop components of nuclear
bomb.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Friday during a visit to
Washington that Iran has stopped answering the agency's questions regarding its
efforts in the past to develop components of a nuclear bomb, the New York Times
reported on Saturday.
Amano said that Iran failed to stand behind its commitment to provide
information regarding what he termed as "possible military dimensions” of a
nuclear program. He added that although he had received assurances from Iran’s
president Hassan Rouhani that he would explain the ambiguity surrounding the
matter, the cooperation did not develop any further.
"What is needed now is action,” the NYT quoted Mr. Amano as saying in reference
to dozens of topics that Iran has refused to address. Iran, on the other hand,
claims that the evidence obtained by the agency is false.
Meanwhile, Deputy US national security adviser Ben Rhodes compared an agreement
on the Iranian nuclear program to Obamacare, the Washington Free Beacon
reported.
"Bottom line is, this is the best opportunity we’ve had to resolve the Iranian
issue diplomatically, certainly since President Obama came to office, and
probably since the beginning of the Iraq war,” the site quoted Rhodes as saying.
“So no small opportunity, it’s a big deal. This is probably the biggest thing
President Obama will do in his second term on foreign policy. This is healthcare
for us, just to put it in context.”
Kerry, Iran minister to meet ahead of deadline for atom deal
Secretary of State John Kerry will meet Iran's foreign minister and the European
Union foreign policy chief in Oman on Nov. 9-10 to discuss the Iranian nuclear
issue ahead of a looming deadline for a final agreement, the US State Department
said on Friday. Kerry's talks in Muscat, Oman with Iranian Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif and the EU's Catherine Ashton are due to take place two
weeks before a Nov. 24 deadline for Tehran and six major powers to reach a
long-term agreement on Iran's nuclear program. The high-level gathering is one
of series of meetings in the final weeks before the deadline. Before heading to
Oman Ashton will meet senior foreign ministry officials from the six powers –
Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States in Vienna on Nov.
7, Ashton's spokesman Michael Mann said.
The six will then begin meeting again with the full Iranian delegation in Vienna
on November 18, he added. EU coordinates the negotiations on behalf of the six
powers. "The aim of the talks is to reach a comprehensive agreement with Iran by
Nov. 24, under which it would reassure the international community about the
exclusively peaceful nature of its nuclear program," Mann said in a statement.
Last week the top US negotiator in the Iran talks, Under-Secretary of State
Wendy Sherman, said Iran will be widely seen as responsible if a comprehensive
deal to curb its nuclear program is not reached. Both sides say they still aim
to meet the Nov. 24 deadline for a deal, despite doubts among many experts that
they can reach an accord that would end a decade-old dispute over Tehran's
nuclear program with just a few weeks remaining. Relations with the West have
thawed since Hassan Rouhani was elected president last year seeking to end
Iran's international isolation, and the talks are aimed at easing concerns about
Tehran's atomic activities in exchange for lifting economic sanctions. But
Western officials say there are still differences in the positions of the two
sides, especially over the future scope of Iran's uranium enrichment program,
which can have civilian and military uses.
The United States, France, Britain and Germany would like the number of
enrichment centrifuges Iran maintains to be in the low thousands, while Tehran
wants to keep tens of thousands in operation. It now has about 19,000 installed,
of which about 10,000 are spinning to refine uranium. Iran and the six powers
reached an interim deal last November under which Tehran received limited
sanctions relief in exchange for halting the production of medium enriched
uranium. That six-month accord took effect early this year and was extended by
four months in July.
Diplomacy: Back to square one on
Jordanian-Israeli relations
By YOSSI MELMAN/11/01/2014
Marking the 20th anniversary of the peace treaty with Jordan, Defense Minister
Moshe Ya’alon this week talked about the importance of the “strategic alliance”
between Israel and the Hashemite Kingdom. The alliance, said Ya’alon at a
conference at Tel Aviv’s Rabin Center, was created by the events of September
1970. But that is only partially true. Indeed, the 1970 events were pivotal in
lifting the special yet secret relations that existed between the two sides to a
new level, but they were the result of a close, clandestine intelligence and
security cooperation that had began a decade earlier, as well as of their unique
mutual geo-strategic posture. A brief reminder: After three years in which
Yasser Arafat’s PLO had created in Jordan a state within a state, threatening
the very existence of the regime, King Hussein decided that enough was enough.
He declared war on the PLO, and his army – the welltrained Arab Legion founded
by the British – butchered Palestinian combatants. President Hafez Assad of
Syria, who with his radical anti-monarchist approach saw himself as a supporter
of the Palestinian cause, sent in tanks to help the PLO. The Jordanian monarch
feared the invasion would result in his being toppled by the joint
Syrian-Palestinian force. Encouraged by the Nixon administration, which
perceived the king as a pro-American regional asset, Israel was brought into the
frame. Jerusalem concentrated forces on the Israeli-Jordanian border and sent
its air force to patrol the skies, signaling to the Syrian invaders that it was
ready to act. The message was received loud and clear in Damascus.
Assad ordered his tanks to roll back, and the king’s life and regime were saved
by Israeli intervention – and it was not the first time. At his Rabin Center
lecture, the defense minister also referred to the relations between the two
countries as a “secret alliance,” without elaborating. At the center of this is
the perception that both countries share common interests and are exposed to the
same threats, namely Palestinian terrorists and Arab radicals. Thus, Jordan was
and still remains Israel’s best strategic asset in the region.
THIS UNDERSTANDING goes all the way back to the pre-state days when King
Abdullah I, who founded the kingdom with the help of the British, started
flirting with Zionist leaders. On the eve of the War of Independence, he
secretly met twice with Golda Meir, hoping to prevent the establishment of the
State of Israel while offering the Jewish community of Palestine an autonomous
entity within the Hashemite Kingdom. The offer was rejected by Meir, but the two
sides reached a tacit understanding.
Israel would allow the Arab Legion to conquer the territory allocated by the UN
Partition Plan to an “Arab state,” namely the West Bank, and in return Jordan
would not invade areas allocated for the Jewish state.
Aside from some local battlefields around Jerusalem, the two sides respected the
understanding.
After the 1948 war, Jordan annexed the West Bank and ruled the two banks of the
Jordan River. Because of his dealings with the Jews and Israel, three years
later Abdullah was assassinated by a Palestinian gunman. In 1952 his grandson,
the young Hussein, was crowned.
For a decade, the new king struggled to survive in the rough sea of Pan-Arabism
preached by Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser, who conspired to oust the
king. In that period, Israel helped the king survive such attempts at least
twice, by providing him with intelligence tips about the plot to kill him by
Syrian and Egyptian agents. Jerusalem, which saw Amman as buffer zone against
the expansion of Arab radicalism from Iraq and Syria, had a strong interest in
the king keeping his crown and ensuring Jordan remained pro-Western. Yet only in
1963 did the now mature king realize that having better relations with Israel
was to his benefit, and that Israel was the best guarantor of his regime’s
survival. That year he met secretly in London with Yaacov Herzog, then deputy
director-general of the Prime Minister’s Office. The broker was Dr. Emmanuel
Herbert, a British Jew who was the king’s private physician but also an ardent
supporter of Israel with close ties to British Zionist leaders such as Lord
Sieff, one of the owners of the Marks & Spencer chain.
Yet his secret ties didn’t prevent him from making Jordan’s biggest mistake. The
king couldn’t resist Nasser’s request and threats, and joined Egypt in waging
war against Israel. In that Six Day War, Jordan lost the West Bank.
After realizing his error and regretting it, the king renewed secret ties with
Israel; he went on to meet with Israeli leaders, sitting down dozens of times
with Mossad chiefs, long before signing the peace treaty in 1994.
In fact, from 1968, until his death in 1999, Hussein met with every Israeli
prime minister - with one exception, Menachem Begin, who made peace with Egypt
but refused to see the Jordanian monarch.
In the meetings, the king exchanged views and intelligence estimates about
regional developments. He also occasionally provided information, as he did in a
meeting with Meir in September 1973, warning that Egypt and Syria had decided to
attack Israel. Israeli chiefs of intelligence and the political echelon refused
to believe him; two weeks later, the Yom Kippur War broke out. That was another
poor judgment call by the king in terms of Jordanian interests. Had he joined
the invading armies, he may have forced Israel to withdraw at least partially
from the West Bank, as it did from Sinai and Quneitra on the Golan Heights.
THE 1994 peace treaty aimed to normalize relations primarily on two fronts.
One was to bring out into the open some of the secret security ties between the
two nations. Jordanian intelligence was one of the Mossad’s best partners, to
the point that they acted together against a common enemy – the Palestinians.
The Jordanians would tip off the Mossad about terrorists, handing them over to
Israel on occasion and letting Israeli experts observe interrogations of radical
Palestinians. Jordanian intelligence even showed readiness to assassinate Hamas
and Hezbollah guerrillas if needed.
The second aim was to generate economic ties and help Jordan strengthen its
economy.
While the security aspect has been satisfactory, economic relations between the
two sides never really took off. True, Israel pumps from Lake Kinneret (the Sea
of Galilee) to provide Jordan with desperately needed water. And true, some
Israeli textile firms opened factories in Jordan, mainly because of the low cost
of the workforce. Very recently, an agreement to supply Amman with Israeli
natural gas from its Mediterranean fields was signed, and there is also a direct
aviation line between the two countries.
But these transactions and activities are not enough, and Jordan has suffered
from Israeli red tape disguised as security concerns.
The gloomy reality of a cold peace has not met the great expectations for peace
dividends.
Towering above all this is the unsolved Palestinian problem. Jordan has an
enormous interest in seeing the creation of a Palestinian state; otherwise, it
fears that one day Israel will expel Palestinians from the West Bank to make
room for more Jewish settlements.
This would eventually make Jordan, which already has a Palestinian majority of
some 70 percent, into a Palestinian state.
Thus, what remains of the great vision for peace with Jordan? A shattered dream,
and mutual interests in the realm of security and intelligence.
In other words, we are back to square one, to where we were before the peace
treaty was signed.
**Yossi Melman is an Israeli journalist and writer who specializes in security
and intelligence affairs. He is co-author of "Spies Against Armageddon: inside
Israel's Secret Wars.